WAITMAN BEORN (History, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill).
Descent into darkness: Wehrmacht complicity in the Holocaust in Belarus,
1941. 2010.

MARK T. BERG (Criminology, University of Missouri, St. Louis).
Understanding the persistence of the victim-offender overlap: Modeling
causal mechanisms across place and time. 2008.

REZARTA BILALI (Psychology, University of Massachusetts at Amherst).
The effect of group identity on memories of past conflict. 2008.

CHRISTOPHER BLATTMAN (Economics, University of California, Berkeley).
The impact of war on young ex-combatants and the determinants of
reintegration success: A study of children and youth in Northern Uganda.
2006.

MALLORIE HATCH (Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University).
The social cost of war: Investigating the relationship between intergroup and intragroup violence during the Mississippian period of the Central Illinois Valley. 2013.

MIGUEL LA SERNA (History, University of California, San Diego). The
corner of the living: Local power relations and indigenous perceptions in
Ayacucho, Peru, 1940-1985. 2007.

CHARLES LAURIE (Sociology, University of Oxford). Political violence
in Zimbabwe's land seizure era. 2008.

ADRIA LAWRENCE (Political Science, University of Chicago). Against
empire: Nationalist mobilization in the decolonization era. 2006.

JAMES LENAGHAN (History, Ohio State University). "Their religion is
rebellion, their faith is faction": State religion and the etiology of
insurgent violence in Ireland and Poland-Lithuania, 1569-1649. 2010.

SARAH MATHEW (Anthropology, University of California, Los Angeles). A causal
understanding of warfare, based on the origins of human cooperation: Case
study of cattle-raiding among Turkana pastoralists in Kenya. 2010.

JEAN PIERRE MISAGO (African Centre for Migration and Society, University of the Witwatersrand). Migration, governance and violent exclusion: Exploring the politics of xenophobic violence in post-apartheid South Africa. 2014.

EDUARDO MONCADA (Political Science, Brown University). The business
and conflict of criminality. 2010.

ANDRES MOYA (Economics, University of California, Davis). The impact
of violence on risk attitudes and subjective expectations, and the
creation of chronic poverty among the internally displaced population in
Colombia. 2011.

BARTON A. MYERS (History, University of Georgia). Controlling chaos:
Unionists, military policy, and irregular warfare in confederate North
Carolina. 2008.

HISYAR OZSOY (Anthropology, University of Texas at Austin). From
conflict to compromise: Multiculturalism and the renegotiation of Kurdish
political identities in Turkey. 2008.

SILVIA PASQUETTI (Sociology, University of California, Berkeley).
Organized refugees and fragmented citizens: A comparative ethnography of
group formation and violence across the green line. 2010.

TOM PESSAH (Sociology, University of California, Berkeley).
Backgrounding: The meaning of cleansing in Israel/Palestine, 1948. 2012.

EMILY PUTNAM-HORNSTEIN (Social Welfare, University of California,
Berkeley). Do "accidents" happen? An examination of injury mortality
among maltreated children. 2010.

PAOLA CASTANO RODRIGUEZ (Sociology, University of Chicago). The time
of the victims: Understandings of violence and institutional practices in
the National Commission of Reparation and Reconciliation in Colombia.
2011.

ADNAN ZULFIQAR (Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, University of Pennsylvania). If some obey, none shall sin: The development of communal obligations and their relationship to violence in Islamic legal theory. 2014.

2001-2005

BRETT S. ABRAHAMS (Molecular Medicine and Therapeutics, University of British Columbia). Mouse strains transgenic for human nuclear receptor 2E1: New tools for understanding the biology of aggression. 2003.

MICHAEL MCGOVERN (Culture, History, Theory, Emory University). Narratives of betrayal: The creation of a productive other and a flirtation with genocide in Southeastern Guinea, West Africa. 2003.

DANIEL MONTERESCU (Anthropology, University of Chicago). The limits of peaceful co-existence: Jewish-Arab relations, urban space and the state in Palestinian-Israeli mixed towns, 1948-2003. 2003.

MICHAEL NEST (Politics, New York University). Restraining the state: The role of social groups in limiting state violence and dominance in the Democratic Republic of Congo. 2001.

THOMAS PEGELOW (History, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill). Between control, reunification and discursive congestion: The politico-cultural conflicts over Germanness and Jewishness in Germany, 1928-1948. 2003.

RAMNARAYAN SINGH RAWAT (History, University of Delhi). Overcoming domination: Struggles of identity among the Chamars of Uttar Pradesh, 1881-1956. 2003.

ROSELLEN N. ROCHE (Social Anthropology, The University of Cambridge, England). The inheritors: Violence and the social development of working-class Protestant and Catholic youth in Derry/Londonderry, Northern Ireland. 2002.

JAVIER CARRERRA RUBIO (Social Anthropology, University of Saint Andrews). The Yanomami discourse and practices of the interplay between peace and war in the process of their political integration within the Venezuelan nation-state. 2003.

SHARON SHALEV (Sociology, London School of Economics and Political Science). Social isolation as a form of control: The use of solitary confinement in contemporary penal systems and the proliferation of Supermax prisons. 2003.

VJEKOSLAV PERICA (History, University of Minnesota). Religious
revival and ethnic mobilization in Yugoslavia, 1965-1991:
A history of the Yugoslav religious question from the reform
era to the civil war. 1997.

AMINUR RAHMAN (Anthropology, University of Manitoba). Domination
and violence in development: A study of women and credit programs
in rural Bangladesh. 1996.

CELIA ROTHENBERG (Anthropology, University of Toronto). Palestinian
village women and stories of the jinn: Experiences of oppression
through stories of spirit possession. 1997.

KAMAL SADIQ (Political Science, University of Chicago). When
migrants become a threat: Conflict over citizenship in India
and Malaysia. 2000.

LISA L. SAMPLE (Criminology, University of Missouri-St. Louis).
The social construction of the sex offender. 2000.